Different media formats can have (and usually do have) different metadata formats, so a media player must be capable not only to decode the media (audio and/or video), but also to
read the tags, whatever their format and restrictions (in terms of number and types of defined tags, value lenghts, etc.) may be;

Although, by its nature, media is "read-only", any serious media player must have the capability to update the metadata tags, effectively forcing the transformation of what is conceptually a
read-only source into a read-write-source;

For media that is physically unalterable (e.g. media streamed from a server, or media on a cd-rom), it is impossible to update the metadata.

Quite apart from the above considerations, the main problem with embedded metadata is that, while media is context-independent, metadata is context-dependent. For example, the exact same
music track can have different "track numbers" depending on the various albums the track belongs to. The same can be said of common tags like "album artist" or "album title" (the exact same
track can appear in an artist album and in several "various artists" compilations). With embedded metadata, the only way to have a media file properly tagged according to its context is to have
several copies of the file itself. A media file can be quite large, so for large media collections or large media distribution systems this solution is unpractical and, in the long run,
unsustainable.

CUE files

The most commonly used solution for separating media from metadata is a CUE file. A CUE file, or CUE sheet, is a metadata file which was originally developed to describe how the tracks of a
CD or DVD are laid out. But because the CUE file format also allows to specify titles and performers for the disc and its tracks, CUE files has been widely (mis)used as a stopgap solution to
the media-metadata separation problem.

PERFORMER "Faithless"

Because CUE files were never intended as full metadata containers, they have all sorts of limitations in terms of what kind of metadata they can contain. These limitations have in turn
caused the introduction, by developers of media editors, converters and players, of all sorts of non-standard workarounds, tipically using the CUE file remark ("REM") field.

REM GENRE "Electronica"

Other metadata formats have been introduced, but in most cases the purpose was to satisfy very specific needs in a very specific (often proprietary) context. By virtue of not having any
predetermined knowledge abot the media format, the m-TAGS format is totally generic and applicable to virtually any media source. To learn how m-TAGS works, please see the
Overview section.